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Emotional Communication - Countertransference analysis and the use of feeling in psychoanalytic technique (Paperback)
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Emotional Communication - Countertransference analysis and the use of feeling in psychoanalytic technique (Paperback)
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What role does animal like and infantile communication play in life
and in psychoanalysis? How are painful childhood experiences
recreated with people who are nothing like the original family?
What are the roles of loving and horrible feelings in
psychoanalytic cure? In Emotional Communication, Paul Geltner
places the pre-linguistic type of communication that is shared with
infants and animals at the core of the psychoanalytic relationship.
He shows how emotional communication intertwines with language,
permeating every moment of human interaction, and becoming a
primary way that people involuntarily recreate painful childhood
relationships in current life. Emotional Communication integrates
observations from a number of psychoanalytic schools in a cohesive
but non-eclectic model. Geltner expands psychoanalytic technique
beyond the traditional focus on interpretation and the contemporary
focus on authenticity to include the use feelings that precisely
address the client's repetitive patterns of misery. The author
breaks down analytic interventions into their cognitive and
emotional components, describing how each engages a different part
of the client's mind and serves a different function. He explains
the role of emotional communication in psychoanalytic technique
both in classical interpretations and in non-interpretive
interventions that use the analyst's feelings to amplify the
therapeutic power of the psychoanalytic relationship. Offering a
clear alternative to both Classical and contemporary Relational and
Intersubjective approaches to understanding and treating clients in
psychoanalysis, Paul Geltner presents a theory of communication and
maturation that will interest psychoanalysts, psychotherapists, and
those concerned with the subtleties of human relatedness.
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